TexasAviation
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2014
- Messages
- 214
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TexasAviation
I haven't done any night flying since my training about six months ago. I want to reduce as many risks as possible, and flying in the dark is one that I'm able to eliminate.
One pilot I really look up to thinks the same thing. He's an amazing guy who started flying in World War II and was a military test pilot and instructor for decades after the war — and remains sharp and skilled in the cockpit at over 90 years old, believe it or not. He doesn't like flying at night. He's had two engine-out landings in his many, many, many years of flying, and he wouldn't want that to happen after dark. Makes sense.
Personally, I'm confident I could walk away from an engine failure in the daytime. I can see where to put the plane down and am always looking for decent emergency landing spots on cross-countries. But the idea of having to do that at night terrifies me.
That said, I can see the advantages of night flying: less traffic, smooth air and gorgeous views over the cities. I'd like to do it.
I think I could be comfortable with it if synthetic vision worked like the name implied. From the videos I was watching of ForeFlight's new synthetic vision feature, though, I'm not sure it would have enough detail to actually know what structures are below you (e.g. land just looks like a plain green expanse, with no way of knowing whether you'd be putting the plane down on top of a barn or in the middle of a forest).
Is there a way to have it show satellite imagery, sort of like Google Earth? What do you guys do to reduce the risk of emergency landings at night?
One pilot I really look up to thinks the same thing. He's an amazing guy who started flying in World War II and was a military test pilot and instructor for decades after the war — and remains sharp and skilled in the cockpit at over 90 years old, believe it or not. He doesn't like flying at night. He's had two engine-out landings in his many, many, many years of flying, and he wouldn't want that to happen after dark. Makes sense.
Personally, I'm confident I could walk away from an engine failure in the daytime. I can see where to put the plane down and am always looking for decent emergency landing spots on cross-countries. But the idea of having to do that at night terrifies me.
That said, I can see the advantages of night flying: less traffic, smooth air and gorgeous views over the cities. I'd like to do it.
I think I could be comfortable with it if synthetic vision worked like the name implied. From the videos I was watching of ForeFlight's new synthetic vision feature, though, I'm not sure it would have enough detail to actually know what structures are below you (e.g. land just looks like a plain green expanse, with no way of knowing whether you'd be putting the plane down on top of a barn or in the middle of a forest).
Is there a way to have it show satellite imagery, sort of like Google Earth? What do you guys do to reduce the risk of emergency landings at night?